ABSTRACT

The EU seeks to define a role for itself in power politics while remaining firm in its rejection of power politics. In order to make power compatible with the European project, EU debate has appended a number of progressive adjectives to the word "power," adjectives like "civilian" and "normative," among others. This book asks what is power, such that it can be modified, tamed, and modulated by adjectives, yet remain "powerful"?

Loriaux passes EU debate on power through the mill of phenomenological and post-phenomenological analysis, juxtaposing it against writings by Machiavelli, Agamben, Thucydides, Nietzsche, Patocka, and Levinas. The book locates power in "power/play," the theatrical, staged representation of threat that generates aesthetic effect and undecidability. Power/play endows the word "power" with perlocutionary force, which the adjectives of EU "qualified" power actually enhance rather than moderate. Loriaux argues that EU discourse on power therefore risks inviting EU "exceptionalism," or risks lapsing into an expression of EU ressentiment, rather than advancing a new, progressive understanding of "power." If European Union is to remain steadfast in its opposition to power politics, it must represent itself as "anti-power."

This book will be of interest to those who work in the area of EU foreign policy, as well as to those who have a more general theoretical interest in the concept of power.

chapter 1|17 pages

EU power and its adjectives

chapter 2|15 pages

Power/play

chapter 3|13 pages

The viral trace

chapter 4|11 pages

Innovation

chapter 5|22 pages

Power/play's transformation into form

chapter 6|23 pages

In knowing anticipation

chapter 7|17 pages

The sound of power

chapter 8|16 pages

EU exceptionalism, EU resentment

chapter 9|28 pages

The tinkerer, destroyer of worlds

chapter 10|15 pages

Europe anti-power